
Iberian Blackout Report Comes Out Late, Fails To Name Culprits
Although the report details the technical aspects of the April 28 collapse with great precision, it avoids naming those responsible for it.

Although the report details the technical aspects of the April 28 collapse with great precision, it avoids naming those responsible for it.

Corporate losses and independent experts reveal a far more severe economic fallout from April’s power outage than official figures suggest.

There has been a big uptick in power produced by gas since renewables played a large role in a half-day blackout.
A damning report shows grid mismanagement and poor coordination—raising doubts about Spain’s rush to abandon nuclear power.
The findings of the report seem to be in contradiction with a recently leaked audio recording in which a technician blamed unreliable solar for the problem.
“It’s the solar,” a technician admitted just 46 minutes before Spain’s worst blackout in years.

The European Commission decided to act following a citizen complaint providing evidence that the power cut may have been intentional.